The Universe Between: Part Five

THE UNIVERSE BETWEEN (Part 5)

By Scott Reeves

If you haven't read the beginning of this story yet then click here for Part 1, click here for Part 2, or click here for Part 3, or click here for Part 4.


5. Puppetshow

     As the shuttlecraft rose from the planet and the oasis dwindled bhind them, silence reigned.   Chet Rickman had barely blinked when she  and Mothram had introduced Adam.   Apparently now that most of humanity was dead,  anything was possible;  so meeting the legendary father of humanity was nothing too extraordinary.

Marah studied him from the corner of her eye.   Even if none of the others were impressed by Adam, SHE was.   Here was a man who had witnessed the whole of human history, had probably even influenced a great  deal of it.   He WAS history.  He'd even lived through  those long  years  when mankind had been imprisoned with thoughts of  that Relativity nonsense.

She was overwhelmed by his presence.

Shouldn't   they  be  asking  him  questions?    she  wondered. Thousands of questions about the past. Why this silence?

Adam caught her watching him. He turned and smiled at her.

Marah  quickly  turned her gaze out the  window,  directed  her attention to the relaxing  vibration  of  the  ship  around her.   Through  the  viewport, the blue of the  sky  became  darker, thinner, finally fading to blackness speckled with a few stars. The limb  of the planet hung to the right.   Straight ahead drifted  the Exeter. The Zeus floated in the distance, matching course and speed with the Exeter.

The sight of the Zeus cheered her somewhat. Comforting to know that the Exeter didn't harbor the last of humanity. How many others were  out there,  in the dark between the stars,  wondering if  THEY were the last?

Back on the ship,  Marah touched Mothram's hand briefly as they parted. Malone noticed the discrete gesture of affection and raised his eyebrows non-commitally. Mothram shrugged his shoulders at the Science  Officer,  then  he, Rickman and Malone headed  toward  the bridge.

Marah  led  Adam through the corridors of the ship in  silence. They passed several crew members who tried covertly to cast admiring glances  at Marah.   They weren't very successful.   Marah pointedly ignored  them.   Beside  her, Adam chuckled.   "Some  things  never change, not in millions of years."

Marah's  face reddened as they drew near the quarters which the Vice-Captain had assigned to Adam.   She keyed open the door and led him inside. The door closed behind them with a soft click.

And suddenly Marah lost control of her body.

She  turned halfway around to face Adam and her muscles  froze. She  felt a momentary shock as she willed her muscles to  move  and they didn't respond. Then, to her horror,  something seemed to push her  consciousness aside.   She watched with helpless dismay as  her body  completed the turn and faced Adam, responding to impulses she hadn't sent it.

     "Hello, Rymyruh." She felt her lips form the words,  heard the sound come from her vocal chords, but it wasn't her.

A look of momentary shock crossed Adam's face,  then joy as she came forward and put her arms around his neck.

     Marah mentally tried to lash out, but there was nothing to lash out against. Someone else controlled her body,  but she could only stand  by  and watch helplessly.   She'd become a passenger  trapped inside  her mind as someone else pulled her strings.   A marionette.

     She felt herself pull out of Adam's embrace and stand at a distance, watching  him.  "It's good to see you again,"  her voice said.

Adam  looked at her.  Horror began to replace joy on his  face. "You shouldn't be doing this to her," he said. "Let her go."

Yes, Marah screamed out. Let me go!

"I apologize, but it's necessary,"  her voice said,  apparently directed  at Marah  herself.  "This won't take  long."   Her  eyes refocused on Adam (Rymyruh?).   "Once a month,  each Enchanced must upload his/her core into our central computer. At the same time,  I download  a  current analog of myself, my personality--for the  day when you return among us, in case I'm not there to greet you,  brief you.   Three  conditions  must  be satisfied for my  analog to be activated:  word  of my death must reach the Enhanced,  you must  be alone with one of them,  and we must be at the brink of  fulfilling our destiny."

Marah listened to this, stunned.   She hadn't known this analog had  been downloaded  into her,  hadn't known her core  could  take control of her like this.   She felt like she'd been infected with a deadly parasite. Violated in the worst imaginable way:   she'd been ejected from her own body. And  the person responsible,  the analog that had invaded  her, could  only be Marina Farrakhan herself.   That realization hurt the most. How could her sworn leader betray her in this hideous manner?

She numbly listened and watched as the scene played itself out.

Adam  spoke.   "Then  you  went ahead with  it?   The  Enhanced program  we idly  talked about?   How long ago did you  start  it?"

     "Four  hundred  years ago,"  she replied.   "Two hundred  years after  we first encountered  the creatures we  call  the  Banshees nowadays. There was a great war between most of our colonies, which we  call the Reconstruction.   It seemed the perfect time to set the program into motion."

     Beyond her rage, a part of Marah wondered exactly how long Adam had  been alone  on  his planet,  that he  didn't  know  about  the Reconstruction.

"But why?" Adam asked.   "I thought we'd decided not to pursue the program, that it was too dehumanizing."

"YOU decided,"   Marah's voice said,  with a momentary trace of anger. "And then you walked away. Left me."

Adam closed his eyes. "You should have come with me."

The slight edge of anger left Marah's voice. She suspected the Marina analog wasn't capable of more than rudimentary,  false emotions.   "But later, as our technology advanced,  I found a way that  we  could use the Enhanced to communicate with the  Banshees." She  put a hand on Adam's arm.   "You never wanted to fight this war we're supposed to fight, and neither did I. But we'd never had much of a choice, until now. This whole thing has been about communication.   Specifically, a lack of it. The Banshees and the Shiw'a couldn't possibly talk to each other, negotiate a peace, even if they wanted to.   But humans, our universe,  is an intermediary between the two.   Why can't we be the  actual intermediary between them?   Instead of fighting the war for  the Shiw'a,  why not be the conduit through which they and  the Banshees communicate? Perhaps if they talk to each other the coming battle will be unnecessary."

Adam  looked at Marah with pity.   Why does he pity me?   Marah wondered.

"How can she make that possible?"   Adam asked.   "They've told me  about the Banshees.   Humans  can't  even  function  in  their presence, and the Banshees seem bent on killing them."

"We  believe  that  the Banshees manisfest  themselves  in  our universe as some form of electromagnetic, plasmic energy. The cores of the Enhanced have been constructed to interface with this type of energy.   Store  it in their cores and allow an exchange of thoughts between our two species. The Banshees can communicate with us,  and we can relay their messages to the Shiw'a. Perhaps, if an avenue of communication  is  opened between them,  they'll be able to settle their differences."

Horror  chilled Marah to the bone.   She'd been Enhanced merely to be a recepticle for a Banshee? She remembered the one time she'd encountered  a Banshee,  and she remembered Duncan's encounters with them as well. She never wanted to go through THAT again.

As  if  reading  her thoughts,  the  Marina  analog  said,  "My activation has activated a program in her core which will enable her to block out pain, to nullify the effects which the Banshees have on humans. She'll be able to tolerate them."

"And  how  do  you propose we interest the Banshees  in  making peace?" Adam asked. "So far all they want is to destroy us."

"Get us to J359 at once," the Marina analog said. "Once we're there,  we can expose this Enhanced--"   My name is  Marah!   Marah shouted   furiously--"to the  Banshees  and  let  her  explain  the situation  to  them.   They can either agree to negotiate  with  the Shiw'a  and  let  us humans alone,  or we can go on to fulfill  our destiny  and  destroy  them in battle.   I think  they'll  chose to negotiate."

The  Marina analog fell silent then and stepped forward to once again embrace Adam. "I've always loved you,"   she whispered into his  ear.   Then, to Marah,  "I'm sorry for everything done to you. But please try to remember that it's for the good of humanity."

Marah collapsed to the deck as if her strings had been cut.


Marah  stepped onto the bridge as if in a daze.   Her thoughts were chaotic, her mind a maelstrom.   Everything she'd been told about her Enhancement, everything she'd believed about the program, had been turned upside  down.   The meaning  in  her  life,  the certainty,  was gone, vanished  just as swiftly and surely as  the presences of the other Enhanced had vanished.

At least the analog of Marina Farrakhan had deleted itself from her core once it returned her body to her. It couldn't come back to haunt  her.   But now,  always at the back of her mind she would  be wondering what other programs that could deprive her of her will had been  downloaded  into her core.   The once-a-month draining of  her core  had been a necessity,  or so they said.   She'd accepted  that without question.   But apparently one of its more sinister purposes had been kept from her.   What else had been kept from her,  and how much of what they told her was really true?

She  numbly  walked  over and sat down at her seat  beside  the Vice-Captain,  trying her best to hold back her tears,  to betray no sign  of  her inner turmoil.   Apparently  she wasn't  successful. Without  hesitation Mothram reached out and wrapped her small  hands in  his.   That unexpected, public gesture of affection and support from  him brought the tears welling up. She leaned over to weep on his shoulder and--

He screamed.

An unstoppable shiver of ebony agony washed over her body. The alert klaxon started  to sound but was quickly drowned out  by  an unbearable screech-whining that filled the bridge.   Mothram toppled out  of his chair.   All across the bridge her crewmates writhed  in agony.   Marah herself doubled over in pain, clutching at her belly and gagging as bile flooded into her mouth.

She  managed  to look up and see a Banshee drifting across  the bridge. It stopped by the Communications Officer, and she fought to turn her gaze away as his head imploded.

Through  her agony,  she remembered what the Marina analog  had said.   In nanoseconds she searched through her core and found what she sought. She activated the new program.

As  if  a  switch had been thrown,  the pain  stopped  and  her stomach ceased  its heaving.   The haze of pain that  made  thought impossible receded.   However,  the whining screech still filled her ears. So she simply turned her ears off.

Now it was up to her to save them all.

She  stood  up  and,  ignoring  the contorting  bodies  of  her shipmates, jumped over to the helm. The course for J359 had already been  laid  in  and put on standby.   She threw the toggles  on  the hyperdrive. As it was cycling up to readiness,  she glanced over at the Banshee.

It   was  working  its  way  methodically  around  the  bridge, slaughtering  everyone in its path.   The CO was a pulpy mess in his seat, and at the moment its attention was on Michael Malone.

Is it aware that I'm no longer affected by it? she wondered.

She  saw  movement  in the monitor above the  science  station, which was centered on the Zeus.   The Exeter's sister ship burned in space, its hull broken in three places.

No! she screamed silently.

Just  then  a  green  light flared on  the  panel  before  her, indicating the readiness of the hyperdrive.   She furiously pounded the final toggle and turned to face the Banshee. As the hull of the ship shuddered upon entry into hyperspace,  the ghostly being winked out  of  existence.   Presumably it was left standing in  the  space which the Exeter had just vacated.

The mutilated body of Michael Malone toppled to the deck. He'd been torn in half.




To be continued


Copyright 1997 by Scott Reeves

Scott can be contacted at: straycow@hotmail.com


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